Police investigate new hotspot at govt office in Palangkaraya as ‘important’ documents go up in smoke

Air quality in all but one Indonesian provincial capital was below harmful levels on Monday morning.

Police are investigating a fire at the finance department of the Central Kalimantan government that destroyed “important” documents.

Military and volunteer first responders continue to battle fires in Java after four people died in East Java last week.

After months of hazardous air quality, heavy rains last week sent pollution into moderate levels in all but one of Indonesia’s provincial capitals by Monday morning. Only the South Sumatra city of Palembang registered an “unhealthy” reading, at 237 by 8 a.m.

On Sunday a fire tore through the offices of the Central Kalimantan government’s finance department. The fire has raised suspicions of an attempt to destroy evidence that could be used in criminal and civil cases against companies suspected of culpability in the province’s ubiquitous fires.

“I will make sure this fire will not disrupt services to the community,” said Central Kalimantan’s acting governor, Hadi Prabowo. “The discussions around the 2016 budget will also not be a problem because the files burnt in the Bureau of Finance and Economy are also held by Bappeda [the provincial development agency].”

Police have yet to comment on whether the fire was an accident or the result of arson. The governor said officers must be given time to carry out an investigation.

“The forensics team will later conclude the origin and cause of this fire,” Jukiman said on Sunday. “But this takes time.”

Jukiman then told reporters on Monday that it could take “two to three” weeks for the forensics team to be in possession of the facts. Antara reported on Monday the police were coordinating with the provincial government to request CCTV footage, and were questioning five witnesses.

Fires at the peatland in the district of Kapuas in the Central Kalimantan province on Borneo island, Indonesia.Peatland soils store a massive amount of carbon. When peatlands are cleared and drained for plantations, they degrade and the carbon they store starts to release into the atmosphere as CO2 emissions. If peat soils catch fire, they can smoulder away below the soil surface, which is exceedingly difficult to extinguish.

Data from Indonesia’s disaster management agency show Central Kalimantan recorded 23,512 hotspots between September 1 and November 2, second only to South Sumatra province, which recorded 23,716.

In Central Java, the disaster management agency said 37 families were queuing to receive water on Monday following fires on Mount Merbabu. The province is battling a severe drought, and many village wells have been depleted since July.

“Officials are still trying to extinguish the fire manually with simple equipment,” the regional head of the disaster management agency told Kompas. “The fire is difficult to extinguish because of the rugged terrain.”

Members of the local community help extinguish the fire of burning peatland in Kapuas district, Central Kalimantan province on Borneo island, Indonesia.

Indonesia’s aeronautics agency, Lapan, said fires had destroyed a total of 2,089,911 hectares from July 1 through October 20.

That will certainly rise when the full cost of the disaster is known, but Lapan’s recent figure of more than 2 million hectares makes the affected area larger than New Jersey, or 238 times the size of Manhattan.